NASAâs Dawn spacecraft is one week away from going into orbit around the dwarf planet Ceres and already itâs proving to be a fascinating little hunk of rock…mostly because we can’t be sure the bright area that weâve seen on its surface isn’t a Death Star powering up.
Dawn launched in 2007 to investigate the two largest dwarf planets in the asteroid belt. It visited Vesta first, spending 14 months gathering data about the world before leaving and heading on to its second target, Ceres. Scientists think of Ceres as an embryonic planet. When the planets in our Solar System were coalescing from the Sunâs disk of gas and dust, Ceres wanted to become a planet but Jupiterâs stronger gravitational pull tore the would-be planet apart, leaving it as simply the largest object in the asteroid belt. Measuring about 590 miles across, Ceres makes up one quarter of the asteroid belt’s total mass.
We can’t be totally sure it isn’t fully functional. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/MPS/DLR/IDA
And on March 6th, the first ever dedicated mission to this little world will go into orbit around it, unraveling its secrets. Among them, the nature of the bright area.
The most recent images of Dawn were taken when the spacecraft was about 29,000 miles from Ceres, and they reveled that the bright spot seen in earlier images is actually two spots, one brighter than the other. Itâs intriguing, but itâs still too small to resolve with Dawnâs onboard cameras. We unfortunately wonât know what bright thing weâre looking at until we get there. It could be ice hidden in some pock marked crater, it could be this. Maybe.
Dawn will spend 16 months returning images and data about the little body. We’ll have a much better idea of what that bright spot is before long!
—
IMAGES: NASA
it’s Uatu watching us.
This nothing, just a whiff of cloud.
A cloud would require an atmosphere. An atmosphere would require some sort of unfrozen liquid. This far from the sun the only way to keep a liquid from freezing would be either mass or an internal heat source. Not big enough for mass.
Sub-li-ma-tion
Its Spock
Whatever it is, it’s hollow, and full of stars.